War Comes to Aachen
eBook - ePub

War Comes to Aachen

The Nazis, Churchill and the 'Stalingrad of the West'

  1. English
  2. ePUB (mobile friendly)
  3. Available on iOS & Android
eBook - ePub

War Comes to Aachen

The Nazis, Churchill and the 'Stalingrad of the West'

About this book

This book narrates the tumultuous era of total war through the fate of Aachen—Imperial Germany’s seat of power for 600 years, site of Charlemagne’s coronation as Holy Roman Emperor, and a place with greater geopolitical significance for Adolf Hitler in 1944 than Stalingrad in 1943.

This was a stark contrast with the events of the Great War: in 1918, the Imperial German Army had abandoned Aachen in a rout-like flight. In the Nazi period, however, Aachen became a major symbol of Germany’s defiance against the Allies. For Hitler—his mind warped after surviving the Stauffenberg bomb plot—Germany’s westernmost city became pivotal in his last-ditch defence of the ‘thousand-year Reich’.

War Comes to Aachen weaves together the city’s story from 1900, tracing its entrenched Catholic orthodoxy, its growth as an industrial urban centre, the demise of democracy, the rise of Nazism, the two world wars, and the Holocaust. The book surveys Churchill’s wartime leadership and the destruction of pre-war Aachen through the lenses of military history and the anthropology of aerial bombing. Philip W. Blood’s absorbing history concludes with Allied efforts to reshape German society after 1945, and with the use of remembrance as a means of socio-political control.

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Yes, you can access War Comes to Aachen by Philip W. Blood in PDF and/or ePUB format, as well as other popular books in History & European History. We have over one million books available in our catalogue for you to explore.

Information

Year
2024
Print ISBN
9781911723691
eBook ISBN
9781805262558

Table of contents

  1. Cover
  2. Half Title
  3. Title
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Photos
  7. Contents
  8. Maps
  9. List of Illustrations
  10. Abbreviations
  11. Acknowledgments
  12. Introduction
  13. Part One: The Age of Total War
  14. Part Two: Towards An Anthropology of Bombing
  15. Part Three: War of Destruction
  16. Part Four: Postmodern War And Society
  17. Notes
  18. Select Bibliography
  19. Index
  20. Back Cover